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Bracteat from Tjurko of Bronze
from 10,92 € ( plus Shipping)
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Metal Variation:
Bronze Bronze Bronze
from 10,92 €
Silver plated Silver plated Silver plated
13,02 €
925 sterling silver 925 sterling silver
(note delivery time)
925 sterling silver
38,65 €

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Short description
The bracteate from Tjurkö. Replica of a Swedish amulet from the Migration Period with runic inscription. Bronze, silver-plated or 925 silver. 3 x 3.5 cm.
Productdetails...

The Germanic bracteate from Tjurkö as a replica.

Here you can buy a replica of a late antique bracteate made after the gold bracteate from Tjurkö in Blekinge.

The Germanic jewellery comes from a find in Blekinge, Sweden, and dates from the 4th to the 6th century AD. Remarkable about this gold bracteate is the image of a head with a surrounding runic inscription in the older Futhark.

The original bracteate comes from the island of Tjurkö near Karlskrona in Blekinge / southern Sweden and is now in the Swedish National Museum in Stockholm.

Link to the original Tjurkö-Bracteate...

The runic inscription on the bracteate from Tjurkö reads - wurterunoʀanwalhakurne ˈ heldaʀkunimudiu - which translates as:
It cast the runes on the Welsch grain (here: gold, bracteate) Heldaʀ the Kunimunduʀ.

Bracteates were quite common among the Germanic peoples as amulets during the Migration Period and in late antiquity, and it is now assumed that the gold bracteate was originally an award for warriors of a jarl or king.

You can buy this bracteate pendant in bronze or in real silver-plated.
Alternatively, also available in 925 sterling silver (Please note the delivery time).
Alloy...

The Tjurkö bracteate measures 3 x 3.5 cm.

A 2 mm thick black leather strap in 1 m length is included with the bracteate.



The name bracteate comes from the Latin word bractea for a thin disc. The bracteates of the Germanic tribes were modelled on Roman medallions, but differed from them in that they were minted only on one side. Bracteates were mostly worn by the Germanic tribes as lucky amulets and were presumably an award for deserving warriors.


The Tjurkö bracteate was discovered in 1817 when a field was being cultivated on a stony hill. It was found with other bracteates among some rocks. Together with the bracteates, a gold coin of Emperor Theodosius II of the Eastern Roman Empire was also found, dating to 443 AD.

The bracteate from Tjurkö is therefore dated to the Germanic Iron Age between 400 and 650 AD and is a typical C-bracteate, similar to the Vadstena bracteate, which shows a stylised head in the centre above a horse and below a bird. This depiction is interpreted as the pagan Norse god Odin with his companion animals, a horse and his raven.

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The Germanic bracteate from Tjurkö as a replica.

Here you can buy a replica of a late antique bracteate made after the gold bracteate from Tjurkö in Blekinge.

The Germanic jewellery comes from a find in Blekinge, Sweden, and dates from the 4th to the 6th century AD. Remarkable about this gold bracteate is the image of a head with a surrounding runic inscription in the older Futhark.

The original bracteate comes from the island of Tjurkö near Karlskrona in Blekinge / southern Sweden and is now in the Swedish National Museum in Stockholm.

Link to the original Tjurkö-Bracteate...

The runic inscription on the bracteate from Tjurkö reads - wurterunoʀanwalhakurne ˈ heldaʀkunimudiu - which translates as:
It cast the runes on the Welsch grain (here: gold, bracteate) Heldaʀ the Kunimunduʀ.

Bracteates were quite common among the Germanic peoples as amulets during the Migration Period and in late antiquity, and it is now assumed that the gold bracteate was originally an award for warriors of a jarl or king.

You can buy this bracteate pendant in bronze or in real silver-plated.
Alternatively, also available in 925 sterling silver (Please note the delivery time).
Alloy...

The Tjurkö bracteate measures 3 x 3.5 cm.

A 2 mm thick black leather strap in 1 m length is included with the bracteate.



The name bracteate comes from the Latin word bractea for a thin disc. The bracteates of the Germanic tribes were modelled on Roman medallions, but differed from them in that they were minted only on one side. Bracteates were mostly worn by the Germanic tribes as lucky amulets and were presumably an award for deserving warriors.


The Tjurkö bracteate was discovered in 1817 when a field was being cultivated on a stony hill. It was found with other bracteates among some rocks. Together with the bracteates, a gold coin of Emperor Theodosius II of the Eastern Roman Empire was also found, dating to 443 AD.

The bracteate from Tjurkö is therefore dated to the Germanic Iron Age between 400 and 650 AD and is a typical C-bracteate, similar to the Vadstena bracteate, which shows a stylised head in the centre above a horse and below a bird. This depiction is interpreted as the pagan Norse god Odin with his companion animals, a horse and his raven.

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